There’s not a whole lot of extra pack-ins in the box, but LG does include a pair of 3.5mm earbuds with a gorgeous braided cloth cable. Up front you’ll find two cameras as well, just like on the original LG V10, sporting an 8-megapixel sensor with 71-degree FoV, and a 5-megapixel wide-angle sensor at 97-degree FoV. A third lens is also added to the back this time, a 12-megapixel sensor, identical to the main camera, but with an f/2.4 telephoto lens that sports a 45-degree FoV (2x optical zoom). The wide-angle lens is using the same Sony IMX351 sensor as the LG G7 ThinQ, a 16-megapixel sensor with pixel binning support for ultra-bright wide-angle shots at a 107-degree FoV with an f/1.9 rating. This camera features an f/1.5 glass lens with 78-degree FoV. Starting with the main sensor, we’re looking at a 12-megapixel sensor with 1.4μm size pixels a 40% increase in pixel size over the V30, but a reduction in the number of pixels as well (down from 16-megapixel). LG is changing up its camera game with the V40 ThinQ in some incredibly significant ways. The V40 ThinQ ships with Android 8.1 Oreo. The Boombox speaker from the LG G7 ThinQ has made its way to the V40 ThinQ, increasing the quality of the audio experience significantly over the already quality single speaker on the V30. A non-removable 3,300mAh battery sits inside the IP68 water and dust resistant chassis, and LG is still providing users with both a USB Type-C port (USB 3.1 speeds) and a 3.5mm audio port (32-bit DAC) as well. MicroSD cards are supported, as well as dual-SIM on most models. A Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 SoC handles the processing side of the house, with 6GB of RAM and 64GB of storage. This compared to the V30, which was 151.7mm high, 75.4mm wide, 7.4mm thin and 158g in weight. The V40 ThinQ is larger than the V30 in every way, with a height of 158.7mm, a width of 75.6mm, a thickness of 7.6mm, and a weight of 168g. Much of this display increase comes in the reduced bezels on top and bottom, with a smaller chin at the bottom and a notch up top. On the front is a larger 6.4-inch Quad-HD+ HDR10 OLED display (537 PPI), up from the 6.0-inch display on the V30. Colors differ per region, as the US will only receive the Black and Blue colors, while other regions get all four colors: Black, Blue, Red and Gray. At this time of writing, International pricing is yet to be revealed, however, LG states that the phone will also be available in Europe and South Korea. The device is expected to sell for around $800 at each carrier, but pricing is likely to be slightly different depending on your carrier of choice. LG is launching the V40 ThinQ in mid-October on all US carriers, as well as an unlocked version available worldwide. smarthphone-comparisions Smartphone Comparisons.ultimate-tech-gift Ultimate Tech Gift Guides.chinese-smarthphones Chinese Smartphones.ic_best-allthings-android2x Best Of All Things Android.ic_best-android-games2x Best Android Games.ic_best-android-apps2x Best Android Apps.ic_android-buyers-whatis2x Android What Is.ic_android-buyers-guide2x Android Buyers Guide.top-10 Top 10 Best Android Apps & Games.best-android-phones Best Android Phones.
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